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Part of The Circle: Vol. 10 No. 2 - September 21, 1972

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Urug Arrest
At
Marist
By
Kevin
Laffin
New
Judici-ary
Structure
Town. of Poughke.epsie Police
tch
c
t J ·1 B ·1
seized a Marist College student in
Du ·
ess oun Y ai ·
ru
was
set at one thousand dollars.
By Mike Harrigan
· Leo Hall late Monday afternoon
At four-thirty Monday af- ·
on
drug
charges.
ternoon, Bodo, together with
In line with Student Govern-
A big innovation in the entire
.
According to police, Detective Charles Middlestadt, ment
President
Bernie discipline area is the mediation
Richard Green of
Leo
·Hall was and two other officers, seized Mulligan's "responsive and concept. A mediation board in
arrested on third degree charges Green in
his
fourth floor room in responsible" government,
Champagnat worked well last
of "criminal possession and sale Leo Hall. According to police, the students have now assumed more
year, -where it p~ved to. be a
of a dangerous drug." While lab suspect was accused of selling responsibility in regards to much better method of handling
reports had not been filed, police sixteen packets of heroin for a students rights and discipline.
difficulties · than the straight, .
presumed that the drug inyJ>lved · total of eighty dollars. Also found
The Student Government legalistic judicial method. A
was heroin.
Town Police were a quantity of hypodermic Judiciary will
be
_composed of
campus Mediation Board will be
Detective Jack .. Bodo, who 11eedlesandotherinstrunientsfor three
members,
Marshall
staffed by
John
Petraglia, Kathy
assisted in the arrest said, "The administering the drug. The Raucci, Gayle -Mullahey, and
McCarty, and Mary· Bailey.
substabce involved was sold as suspect was led handcuffed from Matt Massiello. These three have ··
Another new concept this year,
heroin/'
. the ~ormito~ and taken away in - experience in this area since they
is that of a Student Co-<>rdinator
Green was arraigned before .
.
a Town Pohce <;a~.
·
handled cases at the end of last
or
.Ombudsman.
Michael
role.
This
consists of a number
of
duties:
1)
Co-Ordinate judicial
boards. He will set up and chair
these proceedings 2) Maintain
records of the same. These are a
matter of public record, and will
be on file in the Dean
of
Students
office.3) Workwithanyperson or
. group concerned with the .areas
of students rights and discipline,
and the overall campus en-
vironment.. 4) Issue- a monthly
report concerning the same,
CONTINUED ON PAGE
4
Town Justice King and held at the
continued
on
p.
4
year.
Hacyigan
"".ill
be·
handling this
______
....;;..;:~.;_-----~-~;__-...;..;.;.;::;_.,------~---------------
THE
VOLUME
lO;
NlJMBER.·2
MARISl'
COLL.EGE,
POUGHKEEPSJE,NEW YpRK-
12601
Economou ·Talks.
''Prison Systems
di~ ..
Failing"
.,
Mayor
Economou
speaks
with
~arist ;tudentL'
,
.
.
'I























































































PAGE2
TIIECJRCLE
.
SEPl'EMBER 21, 1972
Champagnat Rec.
Ward's Words
Facility
Proposed
By Lynn Ha
_
milton
Master
.
Pat Forsyth that a
house. A place for
-
parties and
recreation area ·of this type
is
various forms of
·
recreation
especially needed in Hg!lt of the
_
therefore becomes a necessity for
·
stricter enforcement
·
of
_
quiet
.
Champagnat
_
House residents.
hours in the residence halls. The
The
1965
blueprints for this area
Campagnat
lounges
are
show that it was originally in-
By Mike Ward
.
There is a ch
·
ange on this campus. It
is
a very small change, but
it
is
obvious to anyone who is aware
of
other people. This change is not
physical but
is
the attitude towards the increasing number of disabled
students. The great attitude of
the
administration has made
it
possible
for some disabled students to get a college education when they were
rejected by many other i~titutions
.
The facilities at Marist will
im
-
prove until the campus is completely accessible to anyone confined
to
a wheelchair.
·
.
.
.
.
On September
14,
the
Planning
Board approved a proposal
to
turn the basement
.
area of
Champagnat House into a
recreational facility.
The
Interim
Greater Champagnat House
Council has appropriated $600.00
for construction and furnishing
costs
·
and work
.
should begin
within
the
.
next
two
weeks.
It
is felt by ChampagnatHouse
.
inadequate as recreation areas
tended as a common recreation
because of- their small size and
area, but for the most part, this
because noise
-
_
originating from
space has been wasted and
themcanbeheardthroughout the
unused since Champagnat's
two
fl~rs
that comprise
·
each
construction.
,
-
The student body should also
be
commended for accepting the new1..
disabled students and making them feel at horn~. There a~e not too
many colleges \\here people are so friendly and helpful. Barriers, such
·
as the steps in the Campus Center, would automatically make it im-
possible for anyone in a wheelchair
to
be
admitted were it
_
not for the
willingness of Mariststudents to exert themselves for the other guy.
GROUND FLOOR
A
B
/
.
C
D
.----,
I
Po? {
1
.
E
I
Too
e..
I
D
r--,
(P,119
·
I
-
- - - 1
fBurnf~
1•
:l
.
1
P
ee!

L - - - -
I
Pon9
I
•- - ..I
.
.
·_
(.Sketch
by
Bill Bartuc
_
ca)
Propo~ xec1eational
_
facilities for ground
,
noo1 cha~pagnet •
.
.
Drinking
.
Laws
By
Ronald Aderholdt
I would like
·
to inform the campus the number to call is
271.
students of MOTH of. a little
·
These numbers are manned by
known law that can give you big Security at all times when the
·
problems. It concerns the switchboard is closed
.
I hope that
drinking of alcoholic ~everages you never have to make use of
in cars. The N.Y. State Vehicle this information but if you do we
and Traffic Law, Section
1227
will be there
.
·
para
1
states
'"The
drinking of
alcoholic beverages in a motor
vehicle being driven upon the
pubJic highways is prohibitedd.
Any operator or passenger
violating this section shalll be
guilty of a traffic infraction
.
" A
first conviction
·
of a
~affic
in-
-fraction carries a fine upto
$50.00
or
15
days or both.
A
second
conviction within
18
m
·
onths
carries a fine up to
$100.00
or"45
days
·
or both.
·
I would advise you not to carry
any open
.
alcoholic beverage
containers in your car
·
while
driving as this could be used as
presumptive
-
evidence that the
law was violated.
.
·
-
Another bit
of
information that
y9u should be aware of is that
Marist has an emergency
telephone watch which is in
..
-
operation when
·
the switchboard
·
'
iscloseddown.
·
ltistobeusedtor
·
emergency
·
only .
.
If you are off
c~rnpusand an emergency arises
where someone on
·
campus
should be
.
notified the number
to
·
caU is 471-1822
.
If
you are
·
on
As
outlined in the diagram, this
space will
be
put
to
several uses.
Area A will
be
an art room where
students
·
may work on art
projects
_.
or on
·
ari independent
basis. Area BCD will be multi-
purpose in nature. Vending
machines will be installed
_
in
Area D. Profits from
.
these
machines will
be
used to repay
the initial
$600.00
investment to
the Greater Champagnat House
,.
Council and will also be added
-
to
Chainpagnat's
·
house
-
im-
provement f1.µ1d: Areas B and D
will
be
equipped
-with
tables
-
and
chairs from the old Rathskellar
and would be used for cards,
chess, snacking, etc.
·
Area C will
feature a smal1 stage
,
(with
lighting) for student talent to
_
perform. Many
·
people have
already expressed interest
-
in
entertaining in this area. A juke
-
box and dancing area will also be
part of
·Area
C.
·
I'm sorry that not everyone on this campus has this kind of attitude
toward the disabled. I recently overheard a
_
conversation between a
c ~
.
and an administrator. The conversation went something like
Ws
:
..

.
.
_
.
_
Annoyedgirl,
"This
place is beginning to disgust me. It reminds
me
of a hospital with all these people in wheelchairs and blind people."
.
·
Administrator, who was trying
to
control his anger, "You can leave
whenever you want."
:
.
.

·
/
The girl c.hanged her expression to a "What !ight do you have
to
say
_
that to me"
look.
· ·
.

·
The administrator lost his temper.
"Look,
you should thank God
that
you have two legs to walk and two eyes to see. Get rut of my office and
do1ft breathe near
-
me again."
·
·
_
I
hate to think that this girl gets such an egotistical attitude from her
·
college experience. College is supposed
·
to be
·
a place where one
broadens his human understanding. On the other hand, what alter-
natives does she leave
.
me
as
a disabled student?'Am I to withdraw
.
from all public places? Am I to tu
_
rn down all opportunities
-
of
achieving success?
Am
I to become a vegetable by withering away in
a one room
,
environment?
.
_
,
Disabled people must be in the public's view more and more. They
must show the public that it is normal to be disabled because their
desires, feelings and goals are normal. The public should realize that
the problems of the disabled can affect everyone. So; annoyed girl,
remember that
~e
day
YQU,
too, might have
a
wheelchair or a white
cane ..
.
Area BCD will
be
furnished in
distinctive decor to
.
make it an
attractive place for house par-
ties,
·
dinners, arid other
.
·
social
·
activities. Th~ college already
has an agreement with Saga
Food to supply
food to student
groups eating outside the
.
cafeteria (pi<;µics, et<;.)
,'
liuf
, ..
during
,
the
·
winter·
it
has
been
:
·
.-
difficultto
take
advantage of
r-
this
·
SOPHOMORECANDYSTAND
OPEN
.
-.
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
.
located
in
the
lobby'
·
8p.m.-UNTIL la.m.
·
,.,.
of
Champagn~t ~all
:
:
_
.
service: We cari better utilize this
service by
'~
means
_
of
.
Area BCD.
,
Finally
·
,
·
Area
·
E will be·equipped
with pool, ping-pong,
.
and
_
8-ball
~
equipment.
.
,b:Ew.tM-fillW~~r-:;&1'@J
The building and furnishing of
·
this area will be accomplished
with volunteer student labor,- so
the cost of the entire project is
comparatively
minimal.
Students
will staff the area and
.
will
be
paid a token ~lary of
$1-
hour, funds for whiclf will come
from the vending machines.
Exact hours during
·
which the
facility"will be open have not yet
been determined.
Sept.
Payrol
I
All student employees are
reminded that the time sheets for
the month of September must be
approved by tne immediate
supervisor and submitted to Mr.
Gerald Kelly's office by Tuesday,
September 26.
_
Payroll
checks
·
will
be
distributed on Friday, September
29, 1972,
after
12
:
00
noon.
.
Students working under college
work-study
.
program, please
adhere to the same schedule as
above
.
Any student not having been
employed
by Marist College in
the past
_
is
·
required to report to
the business ~ffice prior to
September 26, to complete a W4
tax withholding statement in
.
order to be on the payroii by
Friday, September
29.
Any
student
.
whose
W-4
·
tax
withholding statement or ap-
proved time sheet is late will be
included in the
.
October payroll.
THE
"
CIRCLE
EDWARD O'CONNELL, Editor
ANNE TRABULSI, FeatureEditor
J. FRED EBERLEIN,
·-
Ne,vs EdUor
:
JIMMY
KE~GAN, Sports Editor
ED KISS'tING, Business E:<Jitor
RICH BRUMMETT, Photography Editor
RICH KESICK:l, Layout Editor
,
;
I
I
I
\.










































































































































SEPTEMBER 28, 1972
TIIECIRCLE
PAGE3
Circle Editorials
Pests
On
Campus
Open
Forum
Rebuttal:
Drug
Arrest At Marist
The Editorial Board of the Circle is in complete agreement with
James Condon ( Open Forum
,
September 21)
on
the rodent situation.
It
is indeed a sorry state when the garbage and filth gets so out of hand
.
that such a problem·exists.
.
.
.
The question is, however, where should the :accusm_g fm~er be
·
pointed?
It
is the opinion of the Circle that the fault hes
Wl~
the
Maintenance Department, specifically with Mr. Andrew PavE:Iko, the
Superintendent of Grounds, and not with the Residence Office or other
administrative office. Numerous requests have
·
been made to the
Maintenance Office
,
yet the problem still exists
:
Also, what of the ~ead
.
rats in a Fontaine store room? How did they get there and what killed
them?
·
·
·
·
·
Cockroaches too have taken up residence on campus
.
Once i3gain,
we ask how and why? In spite of the fact that the exterminators have
now been
.
called in for the third time, the roaches remain, moving
from room to room.
.
.
.
,
.
Our point
is
that rats and roaches do nofbeloog on a college campus.
We feel that
if
mough people unite and complain to the Maintenance
Office and other
.
Administrative personnel about the garbage and
resulting pests, something will be done,
.
whether with the rats
_
and
-
.
roaches or with Mr. Pavelko .
.. ··
·
·
.
. ·
·
-
WMCR
Questions
Bu
·
dget
In a society such as the one we live in, there are many faults
and fallacies which are integral parts of the everyday activities.
Being knowledgeably aware of these existing factors, I
am
sometimes able to forgive them. Many people who read the
article in the Sept.
21
issue of the Marist College weekly
publication, "The 9ircle" entitled "Drug Arrest at Marist
"
by
Gentlemen:
Kevin Laffin, responded like I did
iri
astonishment and disbelief:
Having read the article by Mr
.
This response was somewhat of a mixed emotion. Some, I
Bernie Mulligan in the Circle of
suppose, felt as I did, and others were shocked at the facts
Sept.
21,
I find myself
·
shocked,
related. In writing this editorial, I am attempting to reach
-
both
dismayed and, inpeed, truly
the people who sympathized with me, I write in gratitude, and
angry that a person of such a high
the others I write affording the same and also an attempt to
position on campus wo
_
uld stoop
relate my side
.
of the "story."
to the obvious one
-
sideness and
In the very beginning of the article the words that somewhat
political shenanagins he has used
made a weak attempt to show the writer of the article and the
in the past two weeks. I
.
am
editing staff was somewhat impartial
, "
According to the
ref erring
·
to his reference con-
_
police
.
" These words told the reader right away that the version
Academic
-
cerning W.M
.
C.R. in his article
being printed was the police version
.
This at the same time had
Dear
.
Editors,
·
·
''From the Pres
i
dents", in which
a duality about
·
it, it completely denied me an opportunity to in
I'
would like to emphasize th!;l
he labeled the radio as "the black
any way express my version, placing all veracity on the police
·
.
.
'
.
purpose behindtheSeptember
·
21
sheep of the clubs on campus_
version. Being a member of the Marist Community was not in
Qu
>
arterly
.
·
editori3;!,
"~--~-
·
.
S~ruct~re
high allocations and few results."
-
.the least bit taken into consideration, because the most negative
-
Needed.
.
In
.
an mterv1ew
.
\Vlth
Mr.
Mulligan obviously had some
aspects of the whole situation was brought out, completely
Pres~dent Bernie
-
~ulligan for a
form of hearing ~efect the night
villianizing me
.
_
prev10us story, I discovered
.
tJiaL,
,:
0
f the student Government
: The step by step recapitulation that was relayed to the
The
.,
Free , University
;
,
.
of the Jack of a,permanent governs
, "-
allocations for
-
it'
·
was stated
reporter by the police, is not in the least being disputed because
Gregory House invit~ the Marist ment
- .
structure
gave
.
,.t
_
he:-
;
there . that' because of an ex-
this is how it was interpreted and written up by them (The
.
Community students, faculty and Presi_den t . ex traorainar_Y · tremely limiteq tdal by the radio
Police). Whatlam disputing is not
being
afforded the least bit of
administration to
-
contribute
·
~uthon~y. He 1sfr:ee
_
to create his
station, in which
.
'!le
brought in
"equal time," or opportunity tc:fexpress my versi~n.
original works
.
for an Academic own structure, budding whatever
advertisements on a limited scale
.
In order to thoroughly relate the actions that occurred,
.
certain
.
quarterly._ We plan to p~blish
-
a
.
boards
-
and ~ommittees he feels
for a mire four
.
wee~s last year,
facts pertaining to me must be expressed
.
A short background
hter:c1ry
_
digest r~pr~n~~ the
.
·
necessary
.
·
.
·
-
:
·
_
.
.
the station came very clc,se
.
to
·
·
will perhaps give you some idea as to what actually preceeded
various acade~1c
,
d1s_c1~lmes
.
_
.
The
·
purpos~
-
of my
.
e~tonal
·
running into the "bla
·
ck", that is,
the occurrances
·
in question. For the past three
.
and a half years
I
Tile quarterly will be distnbuted
. :
then wasto urge the adoption of a
showing a profit for the year
.
I
do
have been caught up in one of the most disastrous evils existing
to the coU~ge
_
and ~opefully ex-
new perman~nt
0
structure
;

n~t
-
-
.
not know of
.
any dub on campus
in America. This is the problem of (drug) Heroin Addiction, I
_
changed
.
with other colleges.
-
. •
because Berrue
.
would abuse his
which can
.
state
,
the cSame.
,
And
.
_
was first .introduced to·:·heroin while serving a four year
:
:
!",ny~n
_
e
,
!nterested
.
i~ con
_
~
·
of~ice;butbecause fut~e officers
. :,
yet Mr.:
·
Mulligan
,
decl~res
_
~••no
·
'.
,
enlistment with the U.S. ~arines. I began dabbling
with
drugs
,
·.·
tr1buting
,
.
:':J
J\1;aU,1:,
>
Sc1en~e,_
,
:
.m1ght.,Under the pl".esent system

results'.
.
'·from
,
the
,
station.
:
>
,
.
,
; .:
while serving a thirteen}nonth tour of
_
duty in
the
Republic of
'
: : --
th
,
eo!ogical ,_.,phUosophic~l
,
and
,
;
i•
-there is
.
'no·-
,
s~eguard
;,
agaµist


_
'
':"fo
reference
fo
allocation;
!
Mf,, :
'
;
:
,
soutli Vi~f N
_
a~
:-
At this point;'
I
would like to stop, reaHzing
what:
:
.
.
-
:
~
_
literary
• ,
compositions
;
(in
' ·
any
'( ·
officiah abuse'
<
or
;
negl~~t
;:, .,
Mulligan
·
_
see~s
- ;
to
~ake
·
· is gQing through some of your minds,
"
He is blaming it on
·
style) ?re urged .to contact _Jo~
.'
Therefor,e,
.
I-re~f1rm
-
my
;
belt~
·
_
reference~ the
·
budget two years
someone orsomething;"No, I am not
.
I am just listirig one of the
Ellgelhna or Thomas Rabbitt
.
at
·
t~at, while !;>resident Mulligan 1s
:
·
ago, which
·
wd ask for a
,
great
·
factors which accounted for my unfortunate experiences. This
G
.
r e g
-
O
·
r
y
.
H
·
o u
·
s e
·
smcere, the Student Government
:
deal
of
money to both
·
move and
·
.
summer, being thoroughly fed up with my whole vicious cycle, I
-
needs a more stable
·
structure.
_
recequip the
·
station
.
This, as
Mr
:

decided to seek permanent cure through tht:!rapy. I entered the
·
Very tr~y your~
.
.
.
Mulligan knows,
:
is now a
·
totally
.

-
Methadone program, and have been on it since
.
Having had this
·
·
Kevm Laffin
,
worthless point
·
.
because of the
prior history of drug involvement made me susceptable to the
·
robbery of
.
90
-
percerit of that
methods of the new era of "justice" and "law enforcement" or
F
-
.'
.
-
·
Th
-
equipment at the end of the year.
"encroachment." A female convicted felon, tried and convicted
ro m e
.
_
·
So we were left with
-
almost
of a first-degree armed robbery was the person instrumental in
;.",
,
,
:
,
-
-
·nothing for the. folfowing year.
the entire scheme. Having known me for a few weeks before I
.
·
_
_
..
,
~:
; '.
:;-'
_'_
;;,
-
_l~.~alizing th~Uo ask for
!1
large
entered the program, this woman proceeded to appeal to my
_
·
.
_
_
-
~
~
-
-amount agam was foolish, w~
sympathy and good nature_persuading me to purchase a small
A d

·
D
·
·
·
-
asked for a mere
$315.00
from
quantityofheroinforher. The lies she fabricated to insure that
I
Ca e
-
-
m
C
ea
n
·
..
-
,
Student Government
I
ask you
didn'tturnherawaywerethoseofbeing
..
sick.'1Thesickness,
·
_
_
I
(
.,
f~~~;-
~~ll~g~~d~iv:t!~~;v:
;~fi~~~~n!~hhee~e~=d~~~u::Jg~~:
.
t I";:C:~!:;~h:!/:tt~:f~
·
·
.
.
.
.
$315
.
00
(plus
$75.00
left to us from
finding help for her illness, the third instance being the one that
.
the maJor computer ~pphcations the previous administration),
the police set up and subsequently arrested me on.
At
a
time when Marist Coliege ha v_e bee11
.ID
scien~e
.
and
,
starting from the ground up,
·
and
Now that we have a less-b~ased account of \\hat took place, we
is concerned
·
abouf providing
·
a_
·
busmess. I~ 1s n?w
.
anticipated
-
then almost make it into a profit
area
.
hie to be much more objective in viewing the situation. The
.
_
quality education for its students, tha~ education will be ~e ~ext gainer in the first year? we did,
·
police had not only violated my basic rights in the way that they
the cost of a major academic maJ?r
.
com~uter apphca tion,
.
and, although the broadcasting
engineered the act, but attempted other treacherous acts in the
.
resource, namely, computer particularly m areas ~at have was hampered by the wire
aftermath of the ordeal. The act to which I am presently feeling
services,

tends to be prohibitive.
.
not yet be~n co!Ilputer1z~. sucll_ system W.M.C.R
.
was stuck with
repercussions, is the generating of certain facts pertaining to
Federal and · state authorities as
~~
Social Sciences. Smee any because of
.
an
,
f
.
C.C
.
ruling, we
my release on bail, and the cooperation which I gave them in the
have recommended that colleges d~clSlon on
~
compu~er
,
system
_
consider last year a great success
investigalion
.
This entire situation was that of a very valuable
and
uni versifies
form will d
_
etern:11.n~ Ma~1st s
.
co
_
m
-
considering what we had to start
lesson
,
though I have yet to suffer but a few of the consequences
educational computer networks puter capab1h~es ~or at lea_st five with. This year, we asked for
of such an act. What will come out of this thing I can only hope
as one method for providing years
,
people m fields which do money for equipment to improve
for the best
;
but
if
the outcome is the worst
I
am fully prepared
quality compµter services -
at
a m~t presently use the comp~ter the broadcasting range and
to meet it like a man, and not, as some might think
,
copping
reasonable price.
·
m1~t
.
become h~avy user~ !~ a quality, and stated that we did
pleas or "snitching" my way out.
It
has been proposed that )'ea
,
· or two and fmd our fac1hties- intend to go into the "black" in
The question that remains in my mind now is that of the
Mari st
·
College Join
·
SECdS madequat~.
.
.
spite of the large
·
($2l75.00)
legality or consensus of such an act which any other black or
(Shared
-
Educational
.
Computer
Th~
first
organ
1.
z3sb?nal amount of money asked for. .
white student might be faced with in the future. Will the Circle
Services), an
.
educational net-
meetmg oftheAd Hoc Committee
·
It
was to our shock and dismay
assume the same methods of reporting the story? Will some of
work which is located in Dutchess will
.
be held on Monday, October
· _
_
that we found that our budget was · .... the Administration take the same negative attitude towards the
·-
County.Before such
.
a d,ecisioq is
2,
.
in fireside Lounge, Campus not to be cut by qne-half, or three-
individual
in question? Though we fall under the jurisdiction of
:
.
made, however,
_
it is essential Center, at
3:30
p.m. !?acuity and quarters, but that the ENTIRE
· the different municipalities, will our lives become jeopardized
.
that me_mbers · ~f
.
·
the
.
·
i::olle_ge staff_ mei:nbers who have been Budget had been
·
cut, leaving
·
us
every time there is an el_ection, and the community leaders
.
·
comm
.
umty hav~ an
,
op~
~
tun1ty
.
co
_
~s1der!ng
-
co~put~r alter
~
.
.
in much the same position as last
decide that problems such as "enormous drug trafficking ring"
_
to approv~, modify,
-
or reJec~ the
.;
natives w1H be.avail~ble to ac~ as year
.
And this by a
·
nian who
??? existing on campus must be broken up by "entrapping"
an
proposal.
An
Ad
Hoc
Cotrirnittee resource persons
.
1_n
;
technical promised
-
vocally; and whose
individual into committing a crime? These are just some of the
composed of faculty, _staff ~reas.
:
Anyone who 1s _mterest<:<I
·
administration promised in
possibilities that must
be
c,msidered
:
if the act which the Town
member~, and stt_Jdents will be
:~
mservmg on the committee bu~ 1s
writing (Circle_ March
21
;
1972)
of Poughkeepsie Police Department carried out is legitimized
formed
.
.
to co~side~
,
.
the ad-
;..,
unable to ~ttend the first ~~ti~
·
to support the expansion of the
by the school publications and the people in charge of the well-
.
vantages and
.
disadvant_ages of
.. _
should ;ontact,Mrs
.
Ren~ Britt
m
__
radio station on campus
.
Have
being of the students of this institution
.
.
such __ a proposal. T~e
.
only the Of~1.ce of
tbs
:Academic
.
Dean,
you forgotten, Mr
.
Mulligan; 9r
.
reqms!te for: ~e~ber,ship o
.
n the
..
extension
206.

_
,
.
.
.
.
.
_
was it a mere
_
political ploy for
·
4
- - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
c~i:nmitt~ 1s a d~s~re
.
to p~r
~-
-
.
_
KevmCarot~n
-
more votes for
.
your
·
campaign? show that we will earn enough and public apology
for
the
-
bc1pate
m
the d~cis1on making
_
.- • -Associat~Dean_For
.
-
Inconclusion;'I wish
to
say that during the year to establish tlefamation of character in your
p~~c~s~:
-
It
_
spoul~ be
..
n~ted ~at
•·
.
.
- Acadenuc Services
~-
it is apparent that Mr
;
Mulligan
.
ourselves
_
as a strong entity on
irticle of September
21, 1972.
·
..
-
:
·
,
.
,
:
-
:
z-\m•,
··
s
·
·
·
s
·
··
·1·0n
'
:
·
..
·
·
~
-
,
\
:i
'
:
.'
·~:el~t~?ci~
0
t:J~-~~-;-
:
~
.
~::r:~=~~s!:~:::~o~~'::::
Edward~~~;y
.
.
·
·
.
.

··
.
-
\.J.
: .
.
·
..
.
.
·

_
,
_
·
.
. ·
..
: ,
·
·
.
.
·
·
'
'.
:
/
: ·
-,
_
bfa~kb~ll th~~
by
his attitude
·
o
.
f support this administration now
.
President, W.M
.
C.R.
.
· ·
.
.
·
·
···
-
.
.
·
··
·

· '
-
·
-
·
'
,
·
·
· •
·
·
~
;
·
·
·.

the
.
:
past
·
two weeks .
.
Well;
-
Mr
.
holding offices in the Student
·
James Naccarato
_
.
It
.
wa~ ~
_
ad\'.erta~!IY
:
O
_
m~1tted from. last
_
:wee
,
k
,
s Circle ed1f:ion °!at
:
.;

lrgan
'
WM
·
c
R
:
doe n't
-
need
_
Government.
Vice President, W.M
.
C
.
R.
: ·.
the pictorial essay

on
-
page 6 wasJlu-ough the efforts ofl.Anc~
.
:1,,1P:
..
u
._
~ .th' ·P · 1·.
·
.
s
·
ts
-
Also we demand an immediate
NikkiSichowski
·:
~
c~
~
~-
·,:
:
.
,
:
_
,:
<_':
,
.
::;;:·
:
·''
;
:
.
·
·> ,.:
-
_
-
.
·
.
:
-
·
.
.
.
..
youe1 er .
.
re
_
urunaryrepor
Secretary,W.M.C.R.
Richard E. Green
,,
..
..
-
...




























































































































1HEORCLE
SEPTEMBER 21, 1972
Brosnan Proposes
u·tilization Report
From The
.
.
Presidents
The Co1iowing is a specific
outlined proposal
of
Mr. Joe
Brosnan in dealing with
the
question
·
of
how
to utilize
the
Campus
~nter.
·
b. A schedule for the us~_.of the
.
Fireside Lounge+ shotffd
be
adopted according to
the
following:
8:00 a.m. -
11:00
a.m. - Open
-
for meetings and classes
III.
SPF.CIFIC PROPOSAIS
11:00 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. - Lounge
.
exclusively
·
·
1.
Classroom Space
3:30p.m.-10:30p
:
m. -Open for
a.Remove desks from
C248 and. meetings and lounge
C248A and replace them with an
10:30 p.m. - closing - Lounge
informal arrangement or tables
.
exclusively
and chairs.
+ All
·the
other lounges would
b. Remodel
C249
so
that it
is
be
closed for formally scheduled
sound-proof.
Add
projection
area
classes.
·
·
and include T.V. (possibly
·
3. Recreational Space++
cable).
a.
A
recreational area should
c. Refurbish seminar rooms
so
be
provided for on the 2nd level
-
of
thatthey are more attractive and
:
the Campus Center.
It
should
be
functional.
located in the area presently
·
d. Relocate present Music occupied by student offices.
Workshop· ~lassroom .to· C249.
.
b. This area would be cen-
e. Concentrate all formal, tralized
arid
.
supervised
scheduled classes so that none recreational program;consisting
would be held after 12:30 p.m.
_
of billiards, pirtg-pong;
-
card
2. Lounge Space,
.
playing space, pin-game and
__
a. All present lounge facilities space for the radio station.
(gallary, browsing, music, and
++After discussion with the
fireside) need
to
be refurnished residence
·
hall staff, it was
so that
'
they
·
are more informal. decided that it would be ad-
This
-
would
.
provide for more vantageous
-
to centralize those
attractive and functional areas facilities so that they could be
for studying and lounging.
_
·
better maintained. Also, there
Students Rap... from page 3
.
;',•
,•
,
would
·
be soundproblems
if such·
an operation were located in the
allocations and few results. By
residence halls.
By Bernie Mulligan
giving the Radio Club no
4. Office and Organization
allocati·on, the committee felt
Space
Your student government
.
a. The Yearbook, Circle and received an allocation of $32,000 that the burden or proof of their
f
th.
·
1""2 73
h 1
r
As
m· need
and popularity now rests
on
Literary Magazine, and the
or e .,, -
sc
oo
yea •
darkroom should
be
relocated
to
the past, the vast majority of this them .
.
t h
be
distrib ted t
3. Black Student Union -
·
In
a centralized publications area
in
accoun
as
en
u
o
the basement of Champagnat the
various
clubs-
and 1'¥11-72, the BSU received $
1,
320
·
· ti
th t
from combined CUB and SG
.
House (This plan meets with the orgaruza ons
a are respon-
approval of
.
the Residence sible
to
it. But a few factors have sources. Their requests for 1972-
Director).
been the financial
·
squeeze 73 was $5,250. A balance of $81.31
·
ll
· ht
thl
Stud t was in their account and their
b.
All
student office space especia
Y
tJg
on
·
5
·
en
·
a11ocation was $1,250, and
·
the
.
should be relocated to the area Govern])lent. For
-
exam.:ple,
presently designated
as
Music
$32,000
is $4,000 less-than the _SG
.
reason was that many of the
·
Workshop and Yearbook Office budget for 1971-72, and
.
the
.
first vents outlined were co-sponsored
·te
'72 '73 b d t
·s
the by the CUB
.
(lectures, movies,
(2nd level Campus Center).
.
1
m on
01!-E:
-
u _ge 1
etc) and did not fall under the
c. This concept should
be
a
$2,000 defici~ :,ve rE:ce1ved from
.
centralized office space area with. 1971-72. Reahzmg this, we turned authority of the SG.
each organization receiving an to club _requests. Factors we-had
4.
The Circle
-a
The Circle
office setup (desk filing cabinet to consider were: how much the requested
$11,330
this year. Last
etc.). s_·pace
.
s
.
h~uld
.
als.o be current
·
request w_as, how much year
it
-
received $7,000 and
h
I
b h d
d
I
t
received the same amount
·
this
designated for a receptionist.
t e cu
.
a receive, . as. ~~ar, year. Included in. their request
d .
.
Each organization would
be
the value of the
_
club
s
act1V1bes,
was a deficit from last yearof
entitled to space but would have
the current amount that the_club
.
$1,330. The
.
B
.
udget
c
..
o
.
mm
.
it
.
tee
to re-apply on a yearly oasis. No
had on hand
,
was the club viable
.
permanent space
.
would be and popular, would
·
cultural suggests
-
that the
.
Circle cciuld
designated.

reqijests b_enefit solely that group_ maintain
a
high
quality paper
.
th
d
t and still remain within the
• e.
-
.
Faculty offices should be or
.
e
entire campus a~
.
was i
confines or
.
their
..
curre
.
nt bu
.
dget
relocated within two years so that possible for the club to fmd other
.
,
.
.
.
their offices could be used for
resources of funds. As for the by produdng two eight-page
seminar or small meeting rooms.
budgets themselves: were all the issues a month,_ as opposed to
.
·items
dear and were all sources four page issues, which are
_often
Drug Arrest Fro
.
m Page 1
of income and expenses shown.
inadequate.
·
.
.
.
.
With these factors in mind, the
5.
·
Yearbook -- For 1971-72 the
Budget Committee began their Reynard received $3,280 from_
'
deliberations on the. twenty~three
SG:
Their 1972-73 request was for
The arrest was the product.
of
requests
.
·
.
·
.
.
·
_
$7,730 and their allocation was
"in 1971 Nixon refused to spenct
''Despite
the carefully or-
extensive investigation on the
Realizing that
.
they wished to $4,800. One of thelargesti~ms in
$13 million
·.
·
in aid
·
to
.
higher chestrated handfuls of young
part of the Town Police Depart-
appropriate between
$27,000
·
and this budget was a $2,200 d~ficit,
education already authorized by Republicans who cheered on cue
-
·
ment.
·
Detective Bodo cited that $29,000 and the requests received which the Committee felt could
Congress."
and waved placards handed them
''aninformer"
.
told police that the totaled
-
$60;000, they
_
drew up
·
not
·
be
·
acted

upon now
_,
The

The two
-
contrasted this record, by GOP officials, Richard Nixon
suspect and
"several
others" some pragmatic rules to cover
all
Committee felt it imperative that
with McGovern's "consistent and knows his support
.
among
were involved in the sale
'of
the requests: no new eqilipment, the
·
whole Marist Community
vigorous support" of
higher
students is virtually non-
.
heroin at Marist College. Bodo no
.
free dinners, no removal· of become
.
involved
in the Reynard
education, as evidenced by existent."
denied rumours that the informer l0tig-time
deficits,
a*d
a
.·•
.
beca.use of t~e.size of the budget
theSouth Dakotan's sponsorship
is a student
·
at MarisfC<;>llege. He·
.
minimum
_
_
o
_
f

conf~r~nces.
,A.if
-
and
-
thE:
:
_
quahtyQf the bo<>~ over
of the original National l)efense
.
, .
.
·
· ·

·
.
·
<
·
_
also
,
stated
.
.
that there; ";is ,.':no. ,,~xpl~n;:ition
'.
oL
.
-
some. of the
:
~he
;
past
.
thr
_
ee, y~ars. It,1s
,
un-
,:..,.:.:.:.~...,.£ducation
Act:

•·
.
'.
:
'.
.
.
,
,
,
.
·
,
o;·:
G~
·o.
:
.p~•
Cuts:~-
'.
'·evidenee- to link this case to
the
..
allocations f~llows:.
·

.
;
!()rtunat~ly
_
011e. ()f tbe
.;
most
_
,,-
~
"Under Richard
Nixon's
·_
.
·.
.
-
·
·
sale
..
of
•heroiri
ciff
'
the Marist
.
1.Co-op B
_
ookstore
--In
197H2,
-.
?verlooked,
.
~ardest .work«:!
.
~
;
on
economic
·
'game plan'
.
unem-
from page
3
campus."
.
.
:.
:
:
.
·
the co-op received
$600
from
SG.
.
items on campus..
,
.
•.·
_
ployment among young people
·
According
"
to Bodo, police Th~ir requestJor 7~-73_wa,s $156.
6
.
Commute~ Umon -: For
_
1971-
-
has risen even more rapidly than
proceeded to abandon after
,
their arranged
two
:
other heroin sales Usmg th_e above criteria, Le., no .
.
7:Z !he CU-received
$600
from SG.
the national average
.
Almost 15
tax consequences have
:
been involving the suspect on Satur-
new eq~
1
pment _and the fact that This yea~ they requested $3,495
percent of the young are jobless:....
revealed.
Anderson
.
said, day, September 16, also in
Leo
there still remamed a balance
of
and r~e1ved $1,743. ~he
_
Budget
.
-
nearly three times the national
"McGovern's statement that the
Hall.
The sale on that date ~369.70 in the
-
-
bank led the Comrmtt~ granted this mcrease
average."
.
·
.
.
total cost of his domestic amounted
to
three
,
_ packets of
_
.:ommittee to believe they could because 1t ~elt (?U had ?one an
"Students cannot find jobs to
program is actually less than the heroin sold for a total of twenty-

s
.
urvive on
.
that money a_nd they
·
.
excellent Job m . makmg t~e
finance their education and once
total divided from
·
military four dollars. Again, the detective received no a
_
llocation from SG;
·
Comm~t~~s. aware ?f their
they graduate, they discover that
reductions and
·
tax reform can stressed that the sales' were not
2. The Radio Club - This group responsibilities and r~ghts as
their diplomas are worth little or
only mean one
.
thing: he has made through a Marist student. has long been the blac}c sheep of me~bers of the Manst com-
nothing on today's depressed job
abandoned his commitment to
"The informer and agents in-
clubs on campus ~-
high muruty.
market."
support
universal
child. volved were not students of
Senator McGovern on the
development,
·
natural health M
·
t College "
r-----------------------.....
contrary, has demonstrated by
insurance, rural redevelopment,
aris
·
I
0
1
n
.
,v'N
DQi
D
T
TM
.
-1
.
work and deed his commibnent
_
emergency urban reconstruction,
r n.
..,_.,
1
n
l .. h
to a full-employment economy,
_
and many others.
_
with the federal government
"In
the very same speech
Judiciary From Page
1
acting as the employer of last
·
before the New York Society of containing
comments
and
·
r
rt
Security Analysts in which suggestions. 5) He will be
eso ..
.
IN CHOOS
~
ING
·
"Nixon has all but ignored
McGovern promised
·
to
bring in available to
.
anyone who has
young people when making ap-
$54
billion in new rev~~ue, he problems, questions about ~eir
pointments
to
Federa
_
l Boards
committed over,
$40
.
bilhon for rights, comments or ~uggesti0
?
5•
A recently submitted proposal of the Black Students Union to the
and Qommissions. Through June manpower a nd employment', · You can reach Mike m Fontaine
MaristCollegeStudent Government suffered a drastic cut
of
funds for
15
of
this y~ar, Nixon has made
e_ducation, and we~fare a_lone.
In
Rm.
308B,
.
prefe~ably in the
the oncoming year of activities. A year that promised to. be an
over 3,000 such appointments,
hght~fthat, there is coni;;iderable evening. 6) He ~ill produce a
-
academic as well as a cultural experience for the entire Student Body
•.,
arid less than
4
percent of those
question as to what happened to year-end report on the events of
.
of
.
the
.
Marist Community. Remembering' that in
.
this game
.
no
·
appointed have been under age
the national hea_lth insurance the yea:r, along with
·
rec_?m-
_
favorites
'.
are played, we analize the budget breakdown.
.
.
30.
-
pr?gram
cm which
.
he cam-
menda t1ons !or: any. poss
_
ible
Marist Football Club·- $4000 Dollars of Student Govt. fund5 ?
_
A union
"Thsrewere rio people under 30
p~i~ed
-
tha~ would cost_
$
5
9 .
changes. At ttus _time we can o~y
·
of commuting students $1743 dollars, an9 other assorted groups or
at
,
all on the Comniission on
billion, the child car,e program
he •
be
C_?ncerned with non-aca«;tem,c
clubs
·
that are the general make-up of. the college community. No
,.._
·
Higher
Education, Youth
01>"
pr~~sed to women s
W::
0
';1PS at a
affairs, ~e hope to resea~ch the
_
matter of thea«;fual breakdown thegovbyas allocated approximately
'--.,
portunity, Drug Abuse or the
All-
mirumum
_
cost of
$
8 billion, the
.
academic due process
10
.
the
$28,000 dollars with which to service the studen.t
·
body: After a quick
Volunteer Army. Nixon ap-
rur3!
f:E!deyelopment program_ he future.
.
_
briefing of
the copy appearing in the "Circle" I come to a figure
of
p6inted one student to
,
the pubhcized ~n _the farm states at a
In the pa~_t, the whole area of
_
$28,568 dollars?? "Something rotten in Denmark'' per~aps. The
RS.
U.
_
Commission on Campus Unrest, costof$3 billion and all the 0ther s~u_d_e~ts rights an~ respo~-
who at;this point-is seeking the recognition of
the
Marist Community
.
and Vice President·Agnew tried well-known programs
.
.
sibihbes wa~ a
.
set thi~.
It
did
received a total grant of $1250 dollars for an entire·year of events.J
both
,
publicly and privately t o • • • • • • • • • • • • •
no~change with ~e e~vironment.
:write
this article
·
not as an out-right
cry
of
giscriminatioiror prejudice
force hiih to resign."
0
NTEERS
NEEDED
Thisne~mecharusmispatterned but
.
as an appeal to tlie entire Student Body for supportjn our on-
"That
\
ruling,
_
although
·
-
.
V LU
·
·
·
·
on the idea
.
o!
change. We need
.
coming year of events. Whatever
.
became of the STUDENT VOTE?
challenged
\
all over the
·
country
the co-o~rab?n of everyone to
What. became of the referrendum offered us, as
.
a
.
body.
-
The B.S.U
.
.
by the Dem~~ts still exists
in
11
AGENCY
keep this
-
!mportant. area was supported by approximately 1,000 MaristStudents in our proposal
states."
\
·
·
·
United Way of Dutchess County
workable, an~ m the best mterest for capi~
to
assist
us
in our ventures for 72-7
_
3. Voices spoke but aJ)-'
_.
"And finally the failw-e of
·
JOB
DESCRIPTION
of everyone mvolved.
parently were unheard. We the minori
_
ty students being within the
Ni~ort's
_
-
secr~t
\
plan
·
to
_
ell~
,
µte
_
·
:
·
-
·
~a~ist
_
_
~irCle
a p~at to
-
Y~U
_
,
the
_
bQqy ;
~
for
:
_
this
·
~~
_
istance.
'ln
-
Pi~er _'to
• war jn Vietnam has been directly
Assist fund drive personnel
DA TES
ANif
HOURS
assert ourselves
i~fo
the mass
.
population that falls
.
above
·
the
·
responsible for
'
the deaths
·
of working at Dutchess Bank

ana
·
jurisdiction of "C.LUBS". we must implement the fact that in order
i
to
20,000 more youngi\mericans,
-
~
Trust · to audit results· of fund
October 5, October
12,
_October
function as a community
of
stlldents we iniist all haveJeveled voices
well as countless thousands of drive solicitation. Volunteers.
will
19, October
·
26,
:
1; 45 p.t11; - 5
:00 as
fo
w_hc1t ~conies
·offµnds
allocated
to
us as students. For our year
.
Vietnamese men, \\'.<>men
·
and
_
using adding
.
machines and - p.m; November
_
2:
·
9:15 ~~m: to
ofevents,
'
ourl)atids·arenowmoist
.
withclay
:
Mustweplay
,
thegames
.
.
·
children. That fact
will
not
be
keeping track
.of
·
vali<>us
:
teams ~2:()lf P.M.
,
_
·.
_
·
_:::
_
..
. .
.

.
,
of children
_
or cariwe·stand as a body of studentswho have:hopefi.Jlly
·
forgotten
_
by
·
students
<
in .' the
oliciting
.-
at
:
agencies
,
and
-
com-
interested
_
students
,
.
ShOlild fo11~~ ouf,
,
',v,~YS to
,
Mari~t:
fo
-
~chieve
_
the smne ac
·
ademic purpose.
·
:
voting booth November 7.'.'
·
·
rues.
throughout
the·
county:
·
leave
-
',
name an
_
d
,
-
:
tel~p~o
_
ne Again
!}•PP~l
b you, we the'.
.
'black
,
student 1.Dtion'.'
,
of
_
Marist College
\
..
"Students
.
will
remember
that
.
:
NO.
NEEDED

·.
~
·.
,
number in
--
.
office of.
·
Career m~st
·
i:eceive·
.
the support, oft~~ entire Mal'.ist complex
_
iifreaching our
·
McGovern's ailti-wai
,
efforts
·
.
. ·
-
· _.
.
.
.
·,
·
·
. ,
.
Development;
Roo~
1~, Don-
obJectives for
·
the 72:73
_
College
-
year .
. ,
·
.
·
.
·
bega:nduritighis,irstyear.in~·
20students
.
·
_
.
.
.
.
neJ!y.-
·
.
.
_
·
~
.
.
:.
,
·
·
.
-
.
. · :
.

·

. ·

PEACE
·
.
U.S
'.
Senate~-1963 .
.
•·
:_
·
-
.
\
·
•••••-•••••
111
-•••.■
.
••••■·
·.
·
·

·
BRO.EARNESTA.ROYAL
·
..
·•
-
.
.
_
...
I































SEPTEMBER '21, 1972
TIIEClRCLE
PAGES
Circle Editorials
S.
G.
Structure
Needed
The absence of a Student Government constitution authorizes
President Bernie Mulligan to personally interpret all campus matters.
Thus far he has consistently increased
his
own office by restructuring
all Boards
-
around himself. His newly ordained Financial Board
consists
of
himself
and
two personal appointees, which can block
any
measure of the three other officers. Ironically enough~ Mulligan can
even dismiss the entire Board, rendering all decisions on the basis
ri.
.
his personal opinions.
.
Bernie Mulliganhaf? not done this. Bernie Mulligan is not a bad man.
Yet, with the
.
present structure of the StudenL_ Government· in
existence, there
is
no guarantee that
next
year's officers will be able
to
handle their
'
'increased duties effectively. With
so
much authority
-
comes so much responsibility. Therefore it becomes necessary for
each student.
t.o
demand the formation of a constitutional committee
--
,
·
that will act swiftly for the adoption of a p
_
ermanent governm~nt
·
structure.
<:io
Kevin
Laffin
Open
Forum
Open L~tter
T-'o
The
.
colTlmuni
,
ty
McCabe
Doubted
I
am writinglhis letter
to
express the utter disgust which
·
I
.
ex-
·
Dear Circle,
Drugs
On
Campus
This week's narcotics arrest in Leo brought the harsh world
of
law
enforcement back to the campus. After many false alarms last year
about the "Spring Bust" which never occurred, the Poughkeepsie
Town Police arrested a Marist student on the college grounds. The
charge
was
"criminal possession and sale of a dangerous drug" in
the
third degree. The police cited "an informer" as
the.
sourc~ of the in-
formation, but said that the informer was not a Marist student.
The fact that there was an informer in this instance
is
a point
to
be
considered. The use of any drug, addictive or otherwise, is illegal.
Anyone who buys or sells drugs courts arrest. The "it-can't-happen-to-
me" belief is a ridiculous assumption. It can happen and strikes
the
almost-innocent and the guilty without distinction. Informers can
strike anywhere, by anywhere, or anyone. Unfortunately the dice are
loaded, but against not for.
·
We are
.n~t
condoning or ,condemning the use of drugs. It is a per-
sonal dec1s1on, but there should
be
no ostracism
of
any individual as a
result of such a decision. There
is
no one answer
to
the question. One
must consider all the angles, the relative merits, and make a mature
assessment for himself.
·
Still there is one thing to remember: Marist
is
not a separate world
far from that of reality. We are subject to the same laws as Dutches!>
County and Poughkeepsie, and we are liable to receive the same
penalties.
But everyone has heard this before. Are we saying anything new?
No, not new but valid,
-
yes. For once again we are slapped in the face
with
the reality that Marist College
is the real world, as are drugs.
From The
Editor
perienced_ when T:arrived at Marist
to
begin my third year. The con-
If
Mr. Jim McCabe is going
t.o
dition that this camplls w~sjn (espE?Cially Chai:xipagnat
--.
Ha!l) was
_
be running the co-op, I for one
,
w
_
orse than• that
of-
a_ sl~
'"
!
-._
challenge the· Mamtenat1ce pir~tor,
·win
not go near-it.
.
His mouth is
The Circle will have some new features this year. The most
Andrew Pavelko, to Jusbfy
,:
th~J~cqhat garoagE! _\Va~ stol'ecLn~
,
tlie
.
.
·
not one that I.would
:
like to listen . noticeable change wm-be the "Open Forum". Its function is to serve
.
.
basement of. Champagnat during much of the
>
sumrrier.
-
Because
of
to
if
I
ever went
into
the store. 1
·
as a soap box
in
which everyone - students, faculty, staff, and ad-
this, we now ~ave
·
rats an around the building. Rats only
·
exist in
thirik the idea is a great one but I mifl!stration
-
can _openly air their opinions, gripes, concerns and
slums.
_
_
.
_
_
.
.
.
will have to agree with Bernie feelmgs on any subJect. The "Letters to the Editors" column will be
Th~r~ .'.1re many excu~es that will
be
put forth for t~ dire cond1tun Mulligan, when he asked, rather included in the "Open Forum."
.
of this
.
. "lpus. They will range from. Upward _Bounds use of Cham-
told Jim that someone will have
Any material to be published
in
the newspaper must be submitted
_
pagnat to
thr
f~ct ~at many people mthe Man~tenance Department to appear before the Student typed correctly and double spaced. This includes articles for the news
_
take th,
,r
vacations
in
th~ summer
_
~onths. ~either of thes~ are ~c-
Council. I also was offered.
·
! hope
andfeaturesections,as well as for the "Open Forum."
ceptable excuses. T~e!e
1s no
excuse for the inept leaders':Up which that they get someone else to run
Nothing will be accepted unless
it is
signed by the author. However
r
Mr..· Pavelko persomfies: I ~emand _to know why the Mamten~nce it. One who
is
actually attending the Circle will honor some personal requests to have the name
Departmentdidnotfunctionatalldurmgthesummermonths.
classes here Thank you
withh~ld
.
Any exceptions will be done solely at the discretion of
This c~mpus and particularly Champagnat Hall was unsuitable f?r
·A
concerned student
the .Editor Board
occupancy. The only reason Champagnat may have appeared to be
m
Anot~er new feature will
be
advertising. In addition to the display
shape, was. due to the hard work of the r~sidence staff which worked
Ed.
Note _ This Jetter
is
printed ads which ran last year, there
will
be a classified ad section for a
long into the night doing maintenance work in preparation for
the
only by permission
of
Mr. Mc-
nominal charge; not as yet determined. The incluseon of this should
arrival of the Freshmen.
I
demand to kriow why Anthony Campilii did
help alleviate the problem of overcrowding and misuse of bulletin
notseetoit thatthe Campus was readyfor occupancy.
..
·
Cabe. since it is a Circle policy boards. Any member of the Marist community may submit items
to
be
For the three thousand dollars that
_
a resident pays to attend this
·
not to print any letter not signed sold, bought, or for services performed, that is in good taste
.
.
institution, the very least one should receive in return is
a
clean room or containing a requeSt
·
for the
Each edition will feature a
''From
the Presidents" or
.
"From
the
.
name to be witheld.
Ed
"
with its proper furniture
.
Even this inalienable right was denied to
_itors column. The heads of the various campus organizatio11.; will
many.
.
_
_
·
-
write to keep the school posted on what they are doing.
There is little else that can be said concerning the poor condition
of ,
Anyone who is interested in joining the staff of the
Circle
is invited
to
Champagnat upon our arrival
:
y,,hatmust
be
done now is to challenge
v
I - t
c?me to the office, Campus Cent~r Room 169, any Monday or Tuesday
and make accountable those directly"responsible for the filth in this
.
0 U
n e e rs
mght after
8:30
p.m. for a meeting every Wednesday evening at
7:00
building. I call upon the student
body
of this college to join with me in
·
p.m. Staff workers, typists, prQOfreaders and
·
headline
writers
are
demanding a full account of why we must live with rats and pay over
needed, in addition to writers. If anyone is interested who cannot come
$3,000.00
to
do
so.
Mr. Pavelko?
Mr.
Campilli? Dr
i
Foy?
to the meetings, contacttheCircle through campus mail box C-857.
Dear Editors,
All help will
be
gratefully accepted
.
·
Sincerely,
Since announcements made in
~dward O'Connell
James
.
R. Condon
·
the Chapel do noi reach all
·
.
Resident
Coordinator,
students, please let me use this
First House
Otampagnat
space for the foHowing:
L)
Volunteers are needed to coach
or refree CYO basketball at St.
Mary's.
A
meeting with Father
Gentile to discuss transportation
and age groups will be held on
Thursday, September
28. 2)
Father Fox at Holy Trinity would
like three volunteers to teach
CCD at Highland Training School
for delinquent children.
.
For any of these, see me or
memb~rs of the Campus Ministry
Team. Jewish students who want
·
toobserveJewish feasts or meals
·
can see Reverend Rhys Williams
who has many contacts with
·
Rabbis
and
Jewish
congregations.
I purposely have no office on
campus, so that
.
I can be
available twenty-four hours a day
in Byrne Residence
:
·
·
commuters
·
and residents should feel free
to
.
come any· time.
.
.
Sincerely,
Father
Leo
Gallant
''Isolated
S
''
anctuary
-
·
Someone please tell me. Is
Marist
.
College a school where
students can come and get away
from the hard turbulence of the
world outside and not
be
bothered
.
with its cares and ills?
Or is it that Marist provides
an
isolated sanctuary where one can
be safe from such distracting
social upheavals as Draft, War,
Hunger,
·
Unemployment,
Poverty, Politics in Practice,
Community ills and needs, etc. so
as
,
to diligently pursue one's
academic and social interests?
Or is it, that unknown to most
there is somewhere on this
campus an underground factioo
at work who are concerned
enough about
_
what's
wrong
with
society and are involved in
ways
·
and
means
of
changing
the
status
quo.
I personally don't know and
won't attempt to judge whichof
the above instances are true. But
.
I
do know that specifically in the
past that while
all
across the
country colleges were involved in
movements and demonstrations,
both pro and con, concerning
many of the controversial
Social
factors within the system: Yet
during this time all was still and
peaceful at Marist.
One of the majors offered here
is P,olitical Science, and yet
I
have never seen even s small
registration drive on Campus,
especially now since the voting
age has been deduced, not even
speaking about
any
sort of
.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 7
.....:_.






























PAGE6
-
·
THE CIRCLE
SEYI'EMBER 21, 1972
Kathy checks out Burt,
·
Caro's crew celebrates
'
Exciting weekend on campus .
The Glass Harp at Marist
Brendan recounts his night in Eastman Terrace
Pictorial
''the
same pict.itres
'
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
·
.
·:
,.

'
.
.
for the new
yf!ar"
,-
-
.
.
.
.
_ i

























































SEPTE?tIBER 21, 1972
TIIECIRCLE
PAGE7
Doyle, McGowan Return
To Lead Runners
Intramural
News
The Marist Running Red the Running Red Foxes' succes~
the team can stay healthy and
Intramurals at Marist College
Foxes, the Marist College cross story
.
Pete Ulasewicz
will
be the
free of injuries then 1972 should
is
off and running with
a
Football
country team, have been training
·
runner who
will
probably show
easily surpass last season's
11-5-1
Program well under way. By
·
hard for their upcoming cam-
the ~iggest improvement during
winning
·
campaign and Marist
now, all rosters should
be
in and
paign. Ac_tually they have been at
·
the season and should
be
a clutch
·
should
be
able
to
regain the
there
will
be an organizational
work since the Marist
Track ·
runner during the middle and Central Atlantic· Conference
J!leeting tonight, Thursday at
season ended during the second final stages"of the season; Jim Championship which Nyack has
7
:
30p.m. in the Fireside Lounge.
week of May. Since that time
'
Miramant,
a
standout on the nailed down the past two years.
The purpa.e of this meeting is for
many of the Marist runners have tra:ck
iii
high school, is running The Running Red Foxes have
many reasons, but primarily it
been busy logging miles
_
over the cross country for
the
first time three weeks still left to prepare
will concern the problems of
summer
·
vacation to prepare for and will
be
a runner who will help for their season opener on the
officiating and what rules will be
this fall's tough schedule
.
Marist win a few meets this Marist course against Southern
followed throughout the year. In
·.
At the moment it still appears season also.
Connecticut, Drew, and Quin-
order for this meeting to be a
thatJay Doyle, the Maristcotirse
On the whole, it appears that
if
nipiac.
success
.
it is mandatory that a
record holder and holder of many
M
_
N.
d
captain or representative from
other
cross country records at
.
·
..
each team is in attendance. This
Marist,is
-
themantobeat
.
Hehas
enapace ame
·11.
.
consistently led the
team

in pre-
·
·
WI.
msure agamS
t
a tea~ not
·
being aware of some particular
season
scrimmages
and
_
_
.
rules
set up by the Intramural
workouts arid appears
to
be ready
·
A
.

·
c
h
Board that could have a direct
for the competition. However' it
.
s s
z
·
t
. .
oa
C
effect on his team
.
Also, we want
seems that there is a good core
of
.

.
.
_
the officiating in football and all
runners closely ~ehind Jay and
.
snorts. to be at its very best.
quickly gaining
;
These are
·
Marist
·
College
Athletic
-
During the 1
97
1-19
72
Basketball
Therefore the board will establish
h
.
d
d
b
·
·
·
D1
·
rector o
·
r Howard Goldm n Season
,
Menapace worked wi
"
th
ea e
up
y an 1mpress1ve
·
,
·
a
a
.
plan where they can
be
assured
f
h
d
f Ma k H t
.
-
na
has announced the appo1·n
-
tment' Head Basketball Coach Ron
res men uo o
r
e ori ,
of the best possible offi
.
cials
:
·1n
officials the board will take
it .,
upon themselves to screen
and at
the same time instruct anyone
who has
an
interest in officiating.
For his
or
her services, anyone
who officiates in the program
will
be
paid a small fee. By doing this
the board will be able
to
bring
about a certain quality that has
never existed in intramurals at
Marist. What is truly needed at
this moment by the board are
ideas and help concerning all
aspects of Intramurals. The
board has expanded by asking
four girls
to
help with
the
program. They are: Celeste
Maneri
-
Leo,
Maryanne
McQuade - Sheahan, Ellen
Garvey - Leo, and Wilhamena
Wolk - Gregory.
If
there ate any suggestions or
information that would help the
program, please address them
to
"The Circle" Campus Mail.
Thank you.
,
former Poughkeepsie High of Dr.Lawrence Menapace to the Petro, in guiding the Red Foxes
or_d
__
er
_
.
_
to c
_
om
_
e up with quality
School
.
distance standout, and position of Junior Varsity to a successful
16-9
season.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Jimmy Weber, one of the best Basketball Coach.
.
Dr. Menapace also serves as a
distance runners in the DCSL 1st
Lawrence
M~napace,
a member of the International
year from Roy C
.
Ketcham High graduate of
_
St.
Peter's College Association
of
Approved
School. Marty McGowan is (N.J.) received his Doctorate in Basketball Officials (IAABO)
proving as reliable as he was last Chemistry from the University
of
assigned to the Hudson Valley
year when lie shared the captain New Hampshire.
~
Area. Aside from his athletic
honors with Bob Salomone and
This past year, Menapace has duties, Dr: Menapace serves as
was the team
'
s number
·
two served as assistant Varsity chairman of the Faculty Policy
ru~ner. He is known particularly Basketball Coach at
Marist,
with Committee at Marist.
forhisclutchperformancesin the additional teaching duties as
Dr. Lawrence Menapace, who
"
big'
'.
meets. Perhaps the biggest Associate Professor of Chemistry resides at
32
Brooklands Road,
·
surprise to the team this year has at
Marist.
He was also a member
.
Town of Poughkeepsie with his
been the fine running turned in by of the coaching staff of the Marist
·
wife and three children, will
be
a
newcomer Jim Mccasland, a College Basketball Camp this valuable asset in the continued
sophomore
,
formerly
froin past summer, at the North Road building of
the
Marist College
Beacon High.
.
School.
·•
He has School.
·
Basketball Program.
Sanctuary ... from page 5
campaigning
·
for any of the but what about living with and
candidates iri the ~p coming learning about the world you're
presidential election.
going to spend most
.
of your life
Now I will admit that there has with.
been a fraction of students and
What I've said has been echoed
faculty involved in ecology by some teachers and a few
programs, but how about people students who are involved in
right here in the community living in the world. It makes me
.-
-
where this college is situ
_
ated who wonder is this a non-involvement
don't have enough food, or campus, or is it that most of us
clothing, or people who can't find _ here just don't care.
jobs because they're_ illiterate.
Hey
,
what's happening'? Or
Hey;
i
t's fine to experiment in don
'
t you know:
living and learning on campus,
Neville Bolling
.
recently been hampered by
a
bad
cold, but prior to that he had been
running
.
right
.
up
.
with
.
Doyle and
.
McGowan
.~.;.,_2.~
;_.:.,2:
:.
0
.
'::
~:L::..::;;
i
.;;
.
Bob Nelson
·
Tias comeJ)ack
:
in

excellent shape after
·
plenty of ~
.
summer running a~d is adding
·
a
strong middle balance
.
to the
·
team
.
His presence will
.
be
strongly beneficial in many
·
close
meets
.
Bol, Salomone, who
.
co-
captained the team last year
,
is
·,-
.

;
.
:
:·-
-
~
.
~
.
.. :>-
.
-2
.
.
·
~
Red Foxes
OutclaSsed
.
In Keene
starting to get back to his 1971
form after recovering from knee
injuries which sidelined him
during last year's Marist spring
track campaign. He is steadily
improving although his knee is
still giving him some problems in
·
the early season workouts
.
The
status of his knee injury could be
-
a big factor in the Marisf season
outlook
.
Backing up these runriers
.
are
three other freslimen who have
looked progressively better in
e
ach
·
practice
_
session. Tony
Wilger has never run cross
country before, but already has
shown that he will contribute to
·,
Fonda ...
from page
1
·
How
'
to
Register
to Vofe
On Tuesday, the Marist College
Soccer team cameonestep closer
to its expectations for
the
1972
season. In a scrimmage against
Dutchess Community College,
the Red Foxes displayed a very
·
quick and aggressive defensive
attack.
.
After a tough preseason
training schedule, the team
appeared to be ready for the long
·
s
eason
.
Unfortunately, they
entered the Keene Invitational
.
Tournament at Keene, New
Hampshire this past weekend,
which wa~ perhaps a bit too much
to handle for the young and un-
seasoned Red Foxes
.
Although
they were pitted against schools
much larger in size, the Marist
1
INF
.
ORMATION ON
vo
·
TER team held their own with just
about all the mistakes being
REGISTRATION
attributed to mechanical errors
IF YOU ARE A RESIDENT
·
due to their lack of playing time
they are listening because,
OF DUTCHESS COUNTY;
this early in the season. The
"
Americans don't like to be lied
YOU MAY REGISTER
benefits from playing in such a
.
to
.
" Jane was in criticism of the 1) Until August 30; 1972 at the tournament this early in the
'
Pcgsident's war
·
record and County Board of Elections on
se
·
ason are numerous. Even
charged that
.
he is trying
.
tQ
Cannon Street, in Poughkeepsie .
.
though the team dropped the two
"pacify" the American people by 2) On September 30, October 2, or games they played,
it
will now be
ending the gr-ound war in Viet-
October 10 at your local
·
polling much easier for Coach Howard
nam and !'replacing it with an air place, which will be open from 10
Goldman and his players to work
war."
·
,
a.m.
to
8 p.m:
on ilieir mistakes at this point in
"He is changing the color of the
IF YOU ARE NOT A RESIDENT
the season instead of having to
corpses" by replacing American
OF DUTCHESS COUNTY
wait and pay the price once the
ground troops with Vietnamese
1)
Contact your
.
local Board of sea·son begins.
troops she ·charged. ''Nixon
·
is
·
Elections
' .
tQ
·
learn
the
In their first test since the
assuming that we are.so callous,
REGISTRATION DATES and tournament, many
·
'interesting
so racist that we won't care what register THERE
·
IN PERSON. events occurred which showed
is happending to the Vietnamese
·
OR
··
where an obvious improvement
people, we have to prove him 2)
Obtain
an
absentee had bee
_
n made. Led by All-

wrong
.
She said that America is
·
registration form from your local conference selections, Tim
no longer made up of
.
"John
board and submitthe completed Trotta,
.
.
Tom McDonald, and
.
Wayne freaks."
.-
·
.
··
·
form by October
~
10
,
1972
.
-
·
Charles de Percin, the Red Foxes
-
_-
Both
·
Jane
.
and Tom Hayden
·
·
·
RESII)ENC¥ REQUIREMENT
controlled the whole scrimmage.
urged the
·
people to pressure ·
J)
To vote·
:
you must be a legal Although the offense could have
Nixon in ending the war or vote
:
residentofthestateand county in scored a few
.
times more, it is
for Senator George McGovern.
:
which you
,
will vote
·
Jor 30 days more than apparent that all
though they maintained
_
that the
·
prior
to
election day.
· ·
phases are starting to develop
_.
peace movement
·
would
.
remain
If
·
you are not
·
registered, you into a cohesive
.
unit.
.
in neutral in
.
the 1972 elections.
cannot vote.
-







































..
:•·
I
J
\.
l
PAGES
THE CIRCLE
SEPTEMBER 21, 1972
.Vikings
Open
Saturday
Manhattan -Improved
Over
23-8
Loss Last· ·Year
By
Jim :Keegan
surprising spurts on offense.
'Ibis
l
Steve· Holmes and fullback
This Saturday at
2:00
p.m.
the
year's Manhattan team is a much
Frank
·smyth. The wingback is
. Marist College
Vikings
will
open stronger team than the one Vince Porcilli, 215 pounds, wlio
is
their 1972 campaign. Unlike Maristdefeateda year ago 23-8 at reportedlyoneoftheJaspers best
previous years, the Vikings will Gaelic Park. This time the blockers.
·
·
rely heavily on many new faces Jaspers
are
led by a·very well-
The; man
to
watch on the -
to
carry them
to
their first seasoned quarterback in
junior
Manhattan offense will be the
division title. Standing in the way Brian . Smith. Last year Smith split end Bill Kirwin . .It will be up
. of
the Vikings goal will be . the was not able to mount· a con-
to the Vikings strong defensive
most difficult schedule they have sistent Jaspex: ttack and as a · backs to cut off the effectiveness
ever faced in their 8 year · result, Manhattan suffered one <i of Kirwin's speed.
.
.
existence.
. .. · . . .
- its most disasterous seasons.
One of the most difficult things
This
week the Vikings will open Last week however, Smith, . a for Marist to stop will be the roll
up
against a
m,ost
formidable southpaw, displayed a great deal out pass to
the
man in motion.
opponent in Manhattan College. J!lOre _poise than he did as a This series was used exclusively
·. Last weekend the Jaspers opened sophomore._ His passing game is last, weekend and resulted in two·
their season against a very ex-
much stronger and he will pose touchdown passes and ten
perienced Fordham,_team. The . some inter.~ting threa~
to
a_ very completions.
The
Viking
Fordham_ Rams, who are a talentedV1kingdefens1vemut To def~nders have been working all
varsity . team,
dominated help round off a well-balanced weekagainstthis system arid will
throughout the game winning 34-
attack the Jaspers also have two use varied pass defense concepts
18 with the_Jaspers showing soi:ne . · i.trong runni!)g backs in halfbac~ against the Jaspers.
·
Viking. Defense
E,xperienced
Wbereas the Viking offense has terceptions.
been rejuvenated, defensive
Coach Mike Malet contends
coach Mike
M!let
's defense is that the key
to
his
pass
secondary
scheduled ·to
start
seven retur- willbetherushputonby
his
front
Ding frontliners· frQm
a
squad four. _Lost from last years team
that
recorded five shutouts last will be Joe Johnson and Paul
year.
LaCombe. ·
Saturday, the Vikingswill meet
Joirjing Humes and the juni~
up with Brian Smith a talented ,Sullivan will be newcomers Bill
passer. Smith has two fine , Vincent · at tackle and ends · Joe
receivers in Bill Kerwin and •
1
Stokes and Jim Joyce. Several
Doug Dowd, a Villanova transfer other newcomers . are making
at tight end. Thus pressing the
!
strong bids for the . positions.
defensive backfield into some
j
Sophomore
Denis Paterno has
opening season adjustments.
, looked real good, but may be
· Last season; the Vikings did an shifted to offensive guard. Coach
excellent·
job ·
on pass defense Malet indicated that "if the boys
against
some
outstanding continue to improve, we should
passers in club football, including have a strong rush by the opening
five int~rceptions against .GJub of the se_ason."
·
.
football champion . Westchester:
The Vikings have also had
to
Again this year the safetys and search
for
linebacking
linebackers will be challenged in replacements
for"
the graduated
almost every game.
. . . . Henry .Blum and . Ken Vitale.
Like last· year the Viltjngs
will
Vitale, co-captain of this year's
mount a tremendous pass rush. team, has been switched to the
Although losing tw_o ofits starting offensive unit. As ofthe opening
front four, the. defensive_ line game, newcomers Tony Johnson
returns Russ Humes and Johri .. and Eddie Aldrich· are slated to
Sullivan. Humes,
a
'defensive start.
tackle was Club All-America two
From the way the new tandem
years ago before being plagued have performed it appears that
with injuries most of· Jast year.
Levine,
has found a pair that can
Considered short·. __ by ·lineman more than adequately bill the
standards, the
~,11
senior makes shoes of Blum and Vitale. Both
up his height in quickness and are big and strong and have
e~perience. Playing next to Russ
adapted to the Marist · type of
will
be John Sullivan. Sullivan a defense. They will be the inside
starter at th~ end post last year linebackers.
pro~ed, to. be one of coach Ron
Outside~ will . be a pair of
LevinE? s. top pass, rushers while veterans. Both Billy Owens and
alsoJ~ettirig
.
lljs
hands ~n. some ·Mike Erts are starting· for their
D
.
a
V ,•.
s
A
n
r.J .
M ,· 11· .,·
g '
~a·.

R
e'fu'
balls
·
annd a !)air.
?f:
in-
i;_i.; _
_;::~r_
ir_·:1:?~l~ti:~
.
u · . :- . . . . .
l
r .
rafn
1
~ ;
J:/s:~~~!~;~~here
. . . .
.
. .
-
·
·
the_ slightest mistake could cost
As.
for the VikU1gs · they will aw~)'. fro~· his defensive op- backup man for quarterback Ed
contest.
the Vikings a
touchdown,
prese~t a yery well balanced pos1~ion. With Nigel, Murray and Bonnet). The receivers that
Contributing strongly to · the .. Saturday, Malat has all three
offensive attack that should
be
Eddie Bonnet healthy the Vikings. Eddie Bonnet will
be
throwing to
success- of the Viking offense in starters returning. The trio of
- ablf: t<;> br~k the Jaspe!: defe11Se. ~ave
orw
of the best triple threats should be classifiad as a quar-
this game and remainder of the
Tom Murphy, Dan Faison, and
Ay~iding first game Jitters the
.m
Club FootbalL
_ •
.
• ·
terbacks dream. All have a
season will be experienced people Tim . Ogden
all
recorded
V1kmgs offense led by . ~ua_ter~ .. con:iplementing the offensive· tremendous amount of speed with
such as Billy Lee, Mike Asip, and numerous· interceptions last
back~- Bonnet s~ould cl~ckmto-.backfield will . be _a verr
u~- ·
some fine moves to go along with
Allan Zahn. It.is these people and season, and nevet gave up the
the fmest . off~nsive umLthat derrated offensive lme. It
IS
this it. At the Flanker position there
others like them on the offense long touchdown -bomb. Faison
coach Ron:. Le~me has ever put yery quick offeQsiye line that can will be senior Don Cappellino who
who are not given all the credit was named to the All-Conference
toge~her, ·
;>
_ . . ·
.
_ · :
O
make or bre~k the performance is probably- the' most versatile
they deserve simply because they
team. Backing them up will be
In order for an offense to
be ·
of Murray, Nigel and Ed. AUhe Viking; In his four years at
are· the victims of
an
already sophomore Bill Pitcairn and
successful. there are certa°iri center .. will be second-year man Marist Cappy has done it all with
great offense. However,
1
am Sheldon Davis.
qua~ities that must be present. Mike Lewis; A guard in his first a great amount of success. The
certain that through the course of
Some of the.vita_lingredients that year at Marist, Mike will try to wide receivers will oe junior
the season their importance to
are necessary in building a potent fill the -gap left by perennial all-
Fred Krampe arid sophomore
the Vikings will be · invaluable.--
offe~sive . unit are more · than leaguer EmmetfCooke.' Playing Tim Murphy. Probably the two
abunqantthis year at Marist. The the guards will be the. versatile most gifted athletes on the field,
Viking_ offens~ is capable of senior captain Paul Valli, while
.
Tim and Fred pose threat~_ to a
exploding at anytime, primarily Tom Cardinale will play th~ other defense that any .coach would
because they are gifted with the guard position.
As
was the.case envy. Both are sprinters on the
much needed attributes of speed, last year the Vikings are strong · track team who have a hisoory of
~trength an~ experien~:
Starting
again at the offensive tackle getting in the -clear at theright
m
the b_ackf1el~, the Vikmgs have , position .. Sophomore_ IIugh
time. Fred will also _be kj,cking
returnmg club All-Amerkan Knickerbocker has . returned the extra points :ind field goals
Nigel Davis.
It.
was about last from last years line and will team . which could mean'the difference
y~ar at this time that Nigel made up _with~ Captain Ken Vitale
.
to ·
in what.is expected
_to
be
a close .
the headlines in the local papers balance off
a
strong Marist line.
by virtual~y running through and
Inpasfyears Marist has always
·around• a. much. ou~classed been fortunate.enough.to have.a·
Assumption team,
It
seems Ulat fine group of receivers: This year
he's ready
to
p~ck up where he is no exception. Mike Cassidy and
leftoff~nd
try
for his second one-. Ron.: Vuy will.·. replace • captain
thousand yard. rushing season .. Paul
'VallL
.who makes · the
Filli_ng_Jn ~~~b~~!tfield will
be
transition
to
guard: Both Cassidy
unstoppable tfiird. year . man· and·· Vuy are excellent· blockers
: Murray Milligan. Unlike Nigel, and will be very important · in
Murraywill.rarelytrytoru!] over helping
'to.
establish a running
you,,.but rather dan_~e a!).d cut game. (Vuy _also ·_will be· the
The Director arid President of
In· spite of our screaming. and.
th~. Football ~lub want to take .. crying we still ~ow that.you are
this opportunity
to
wish the best . the best club football team in the
. of Itickto the.1972 Marist football '.country.>:
·
. :
.
. ·• ·. ·::
,,Viki~g.s,
as·.tJi~y open Uteff
tough· . Good
luckcfellows; .. ;.
.
sched_ule\.on ·Saturday'. against
-
· : Bob and John
Manhattan;. . ;·
0:->·
, ·.
Sept. 23
Sept.30
Octs
Oct.14
Oct.20
Oct.28
Nov.4
Nov. 12
. VIKING SCHEDULE
Manhattan
W
estcbester
Providence
New Haven
Iona
Fairfield
Norwalk
Siena'-
Hl:30
H7:30
A8:00
. A7:30
A7:30
Hl:30
Al:30
.Hl:30


10.2.1
10.2.2
10.2.3
10.2.4
10.2.5
10.2.6
10.2.7
10.2.8